Collections

John Henry Wrenn Library

Wrenn's personal bookplate incorporatingillustrations of his library, his copy of Rembrandt's "Three Trees," and hishouse in Chicago.

The Wrenn Library
(6,000 volumes), the first rare book collection acquired by The University
of Texas, came to Austin in 1918. Wrenn was a Chicago financier who collected
English literaturethe 17th century and the Romantic poets in particular.
He purchased many books from the English bibliographer and collector Thomas
J. Wise, later identified as a master forger. As a result, the Wrenn Library
contains nearly one hundred examples of Wise's spurious 19th-century
pamphlets and many copies of 17th-century plays which Wise is known to
have "improved" with leaves torn from British Museum copies.
High spots include the King's Collection, a separately designated
section of the library with the prose pamphlets of John Milton and proclamations
of the Stuart Kings from the English Civil War; an extensive collection
of 17th-century quarto plays; Shelley's scarce Original Poetry;
By Victor and Cazire (1810) as well as other first editions of the
major Romantics; and a complete run of Kelmscott Press books.

Printed catalog: A Catalogue of the Library of the Late John Henry Wrenn (Austin, 1920)